Posted - February 12, 2014 - gCaptain - Chris Cooper and Kiyotaka Matsuda - Bloomberg
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd., Japan’s third-largest shipping line by
sales, has ordered a vessel fitted with an engine to cut nitrogen oxide
emissions to meet stricter controls, said three people familiar with the
situation.
The new vessel will be the flagship of K-Line’s “Drive Green Project”, announced in late 2013.
The Tokyo-based shipping line, also known as K-Line, will put an
engine being developed by Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. in a car
carrier to be completed in January 2016, said the people, who asked not
to be named before an official announcement. The engine and other
changes will add about 10 percent to the cost of the ship, the three
people said.
Kawasaki Kisen is also putting a device, called a scrubber, in the
ship to remove sulfur oxides from exhaust gases, to meet stricter
regulations from the International Maritime Organization, the United
Nations’ shipping division, set to be introduced in 2015, the people
said. World shipping emits about 2.7 percent of the global total of
greenhouse gases, according to an IMO study.
Jitsuo Narita, a spokesman for Kawasaki Kisen, declined to comment.
Kawasaki Heavy has developed a ship engine to reduce nitrogen oxide
emissions to meet IMO regulations and is working to optimize
performance, the company said in a statement in May 2012. Teppei
Kobayashi, a spokesman for Kawasaki Heavy, declined to comment on who
would buy the engine.
Ship pollution rules are set to tighten in coming years to help
reduce the emission of greenhouse gases. The IMO will limit the maximum
amount of sulfur oxides emissions from ships to 0.1 percent of the fuel
weight in emission control areas, according to its website. The IMO is
also set to toughen rules on nitrogen oxide emissions on ships built
from 2016, according to the website.
Kawasaki Kisen said in September it was ordering four new carriers to
be completed in the fiscal year ending March 2016, according to the
company.
The new engine will be fitted on one of those four ships, whose
construction is starting before 2016, earlier than needed under the new
IMO regulations, the three people said.
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Thursday, February 13, 2014
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